The Weekly Advertiser Horsham

We need to be ready to pick up pieces

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While we continue to wrestle with a silent and persistent microscopi­c adversary, we can’t help but fear another type of creeping ‘contagion’ is hovering in the background.

The only informatio­n pouring into newsrooms at the moment that comes close to matching messages about COVID-19 are messages about mental health.

It stands to reason, during these awkward times and in some cases crippling circumstan­ces, that many people would be under pressure to manage their mental health.

Society’s morale as well as its people are being subject to an unseen bludgeonin­g and our resilience is as much in the spotlight as anything.

And making it complicate­d is that we’re all vastly different from each other with varying coping mechanisms, perception­s and views.

Our response to tackling and meeting the challenges of mental illness needs to be just as profound as our frontline efforts in fighting the virus.

It might well be that addressing this potential life destroyer, if it doesn’t already, will represent the next frontand-centre battlegrou­nd.

It is a fight of which many in regional communitie­s are all too familiar and galvanises a need for appropriat­e and adequate services to move forward.

A community push for a mentalheal­th crisis centre early last year, well before any hint of COVID-19, outlined in depth a desperate need for dedicated support services in the Wimmera.

Horsham Rotary clubs and advocacy group Healthy Minds Horsham launched the push to establish a crisis centre in Horsham.

The project involved filling ‘a serious health service gap’ in the region with dedicated and immediate support and interventi­on services to help people trying to cope with depressive and other mental illnesses.

A brief was for a crisis centre to be available to anyone and at any time and operate as part of, with or alongside, health and service agencies.

We weren’t sure how this would work, except that it needed a supporting structure to allow for a 24-hour, seven-days-a-week response.

The message was profound, backed strongly by statistics and case studies and even attracted the attention of a national not-for-profit health service keen to explore the idea.

Obviously, with all that has happened around the globe this year, has since slipped off the radar.

But the reality is that we know from historical circumstan­ces that these types of services and centres, not just in the Wimmera, will be critical in helping communitie­s get back on their feet. • People can visit www.beyondblue. org.au or www.lifeline.org.au for informatio­n and support about anxiety, depression and suicide. People in need of crisis support and suicide prevention services can call Lifeline’s 24-hour hotline on 13 11 14. If a life is in danger, people should call police on triple zero. • Brodie Cramer page 15. shares his it story,

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